Children''s Understanding of Cognitive Cuing: How to Manipulate Cues to Fool a Competitor |
| |
Authors: | Beate Sodian Wolfgang Schneider |
| |
Affiliation: | Institut für empirische P?dagogik, University of Munich, West Germany. |
| |
Abstract: | 4-6-year-old children's understanding of cognitive cuing was studied in 2 experiments using a strategic interaction paradigm. Children could fool a competitor by hiding targets in locations that were labeled with semantically weakly associated cues and help a cooperative partner by hiding them in semantically highly associated locations. Very few 4-year-olds, half the 5-year-olds, and almost all 6-years-olds appropriately chose semantically highly vs. weakly associated hiding places to make the targets easy vs. difficult to find. The second experiment showed that 4-year-olds did not strategically manipulate cues as sources of information, although they themselves proficiently used them as such in a search task. These findings are discussed with regard to research on children's developing understanding of origins of knowledge and belief and with regard to recent claims that young preschoolers possess a metacognitive understanding of cognitive cuing. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|